A new type of malicious software infecting Appleâs Macs is mining monero, researchers with cybersecurity firm Malwarebytes announced.
In a blog post Tuesday, the antivirus software developer revealed that an innocuous Mac process called âmshelperâ was being abused on infected machines to mine monero for an unknown attacker. Malwarebytes director of Mac and mobile Thomas Reed wrote that along with a combination of other malicious processes, mshelper utilized large amounts of central processing unit (CPU) power, but was ânot particularly dangerousâ to Macs.
âAffected users saw their fans whirring out of control and a process named âmshelperâ gobbling up CPU time like Cookie Monster. Fortunately, this malware is not very sophisticated and is easy to remove,â he wrote, adding:
âThe malware became public knowledge in a post on Appleâs discussion forums, where the âmshelperâ process was found to be the culprit. Digging deeper, it was discovered that there were a couple other suspicious processes installed as well. We went searching and found copies of these files.â
There are three main components to the malware, he wrote: the dropper, which is a program which downloads the malware; the launcher, which installs and launches the malware; and the miner itself, which is based on XMRig, an open source monero miner.
Malwarebytes has not yet discovered what the dropper program is, but past examples include fake Adobe Flash Player installers and other downloaded software, Reed said.
However, it installs something called âpplauncher,â which installs the miner. Notably, it is written in Golang, which Reed says is an odd choice. He added that âusing this for what appears to be simple functionality is probably a sign that the person who created it is not particularly familiar with Macs.â
His final assessment is that the miner, while annoying, is not complicated, and can be easily removed. He noted that there are an increasing number of Mac cryptominers, saying â
Mac cryptomining malware has been on the rise recently, just as in the Windows world. This malware follows other cryptominers for macOS ⦠Iâd rather be infected with a cryptominer than some other kind of malware, but that doesnât make it a good thing.â
Macbook Pro image via thanmano / Shutterstock